Author Topic: Tiges vs Hawks media articles  (Read 3541 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Tiges vs Hawks media articles
« on: August 22, 2005, 04:53:23 AM »
Tigers foil draft-dodging Hawks
By Michael Gleeson
The Age
August 22, 2005

RICHMOND 3.2 7.7 14.11 20.17 (137) defeated HAWTHORN 6.2 13.2 17.5 21.7 (133)
Goals: Richmond: M Richardson 4 R Hall 3 K Pettifer 3 T Simmonds 2 G Stafford 2 R Tambling 2 B Deledio R Hilton K Johnson S Tuck. Hawthorn: B Dixon 5 H Miller 4 T Croad 2 P Everitt 2 L Franklin 2 A Lekkas 2 T Clarke L Hodge N Ries C Young.
Best: Richmond: S Tuck R Hall B Deledio J Bowden K Pettifer. Hawthorn: P Everitt L Hodge S Crawford B Dixon J Roughead.
Injuries: Nil.
Reports: Nil.
Umpires: M Nicholls R Chamberlain M Ellis.
Crowd: 30,906 at Telstra Dome.

THIS was the game the AFL craved, but not the result it most desired. What the AFL really needed was Hawthorn to win to finally silence those who insist teams lie down for draft picks. What they got was a team that refused to lie down but ran themselves into the ground.

Hawthorn coach Alastair Clarkson demanded after the game the debate over tanking cease. He said his young team had proved that teams, or his team at least, played to win, irrespective of draft sweeteners. They were shattered to lose.

The Hawks led by 21 points with only seven minutes left on the clock before Richmond booted four unanswered goals, including the match-winner with just 45 seconds remaining. While the Hawks twice led by as much as 41 points — in the second and third terms — Richmond never seemed completely out of it. Hawthorn's accurate kicking meant it was flattered slightly by the scoreline.

This was a match between two also-rans that should never have been this good. But sport is an irrational thing. Maybe it was because there was nothing really to gain or lose that allowed both teams to play with such freedom.

They both took risks and backed themselves constantly to play on, run and carry. Peter Everitt was the dominant force in the ruck throughout the day, while up forward Ben Dixon and Harry Miller unsettled Richmond early. Miller's pace and creativity was difficult to counter.

Dixon and Miller had two goals each in the first as Hawthorn established the lead it would hold for the most part of the day. The Hawks kicked further away in the second term, with Dixon booting his five goals to half-time before Darren Gaspar was moved to him and he barely got a sniff of it thereafter.

Joel Smith, released from a back flank, was industrious on the ball along with Luke Hodge. Crawford played of a half-back flank in almost a role reversal with Smith. The captain was giving drive and helping set up the run down the flanks that so hurt the Tigers.

Richmond coach Terry Wallace conceded after the game he was already aware his side lacked foot speed. Yesterday provided further evidence.

Richmond kicked the last five goals of the third quarter to trail by just 12 points at the last break. It seemed all of the swings in momentum coincided with Everitt's arrival and departure from the ruck. Ray Hall, playing probably his best game for Richmond, and Troy Simmonds were also important to the third-quarter resurgence.

The Hawks responded but the Tigers kept coming — they are a side that thrives on momentum and confidence. Shane Tuck, who was overawed playing his former team first time around, was far more composed yesterday and was damaging to his dad's old club. He could yet win Richmond's best and fairest.

Yesterday, though, the honours were with Brett Deledio. When the game needed to be won in the last term he and fellow first-year player Richard Tambling moved to the wings and offered the Tigers the leg speed they had lacked throughout most of the game.

The goal that delivered the Tigers the lead was created by the poise of Deledio. He gathered on the wing ran, carried, bounced, stepped inside and delivered long to the goal square, where a fumbled handpass to Kayne Pettifer ended in a goal.

Jarryd Roughead's mature effort on Matthew Richardson made for a solid show from all four of the players taken in four of the top five places in last year draft — including Hawthorn's Buddy Franklin.

Indeed when teams insist they don't think of priority picks, the evidence on the ground made you wonder, why not?

http://www.realfooty.theage.com.au/realfooty/articles/2005/08/21/1124562753052.html

Offline one-eyed

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Rebuilding clubs want every win (The Age)
« Reply #1 on: August 22, 2005, 04:55:55 AM »
Rebuilding clubs want every win
By Jake Niall
The Age
August 22, 2005

Hawthorn's Jarryd Roughhead has the reach to beat some other handy players at Telstra Dome yesterday.
Photo: Vince Caligiuri

THE Hawks didn't tank. They just didn't have enough left in theirs to survive a wasteful Richmond's withering finish. An effort that defined the Tigers' season as respectable and upwardly mobile, and a notch or two above the competition's fallen aristocracy.

Richmond was so inaccurate, it almost cost the Hawks a priority pick. Now, with Sydney to come, they seem assured of not crossing that five-win Rubicon that has sparked so much treacherous talk.

Happily, there was nothing dead about this rubber. It had an Andrew Demetriou-approved style of footy — fast, open, with Sherrin squatters getting pinged, highly-rated draftees exhilarating both sets of supporters and the game in doubt until the final seconds.

Did it mean anything? Wayne Campbell has seen his share of meaningless Richmond games, but he thought yesterday, his 296th and penultimate game in yellow and black, meant plenty.

"To me going in, it was almost our season, as to whether our season had been almost good or bad," Campbell explained. "It puts us just outside the eight, as opposed to in the bottom rung I reckon. I thought it was massively important, more so now that we've won."

Terry Wallace noted with satisfaction that, in the corresponding late season game last year, he had sat in the grandstand and watched as the Hawks prevailed comfortably over his old club in what recruiters rightly called the "Brett Deledio Cup".

Plough's boys have 10 wins and the team he might have coached — though he was never formally offered the Hawthorn job — has exactly half that number. Yet, there does not seem to be much separating these aspirational clubs, which, like a pair of winos, began their journey from the cellar together. One's progress will be measured against the other's.

Richmond is ahead of Hawthorn, to be sure. The Tigers have more players capable of playing at the required level, more of what David Parkin calls "bona fides" than Hawthorn, which does not have quite as much senior scaffolding to support its highly promising teens, with no sorcerer of Nathan Brown's class to bring back, either.

The flipside is that the Hawks have been prepared to go further backwards, have treated 2005 as Year Zero and will now pick up more early picks; the system rewards this strategy and in 12 months their playing list might be hold the greater talent.

Campbell could see the parallels between the Hawks and Tigers, but also the point of difference. "I mean, we won the wooden spoon, so we were coming off just as low a base as they were coming off. They've chosen to go a different path. They went strictly youth, whereas we went a blend of youth and a bit of experience as well.

As the first step in their respective reconstructions, the Tigers chose mediums and smalls (Deledio and Richard Tambling) under a "best available player" philosophy with their prized picks, while the Hawks went tall (Jarryd Roughead and Lance Franklin). Yesterday became like a talent quest for this gifted teens, with Deledio finishing, fittingly, as the most impressive.

The Tigers have to find replacements for Richo, Darren Gaspar and need a ruckman. The Hawks have no less of an imminent hole in the form of Shane Crawford and Peter Everitt, the latter, at 31, is still the club's most influential performer.

Richmond might have been less pure in its pursuit of a youth policy, it was also more willing to commit long term to a coach. Wallace has the luxury of a further four years on his contract, Alastair Clarkson, as an unproven coaching talent, has only 12 months. Plough, thus, has more margin for failure than his Hawk counterpart and, in turn, might influence steps that each club takes.

"Time will tell," said Campbell. "But I think the path that Terry's chosen is a good one."

It's possible that both clubs might scale the mountain, more or less in unison, so that like yesterday, each will emerge victorious.

http://www.realfooty.theage.com.au/realfooty/articles/2005/08/21/1124562753055.html

Offline one-eyed

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Retiring Graham ends in daze (Herald-Sun)
« Reply #2 on: August 22, 2005, 04:58:20 AM »
Retiring Graham ends in daze
22 August 2005   
Herald Sun
Trevor Grant

MARK Graham may have spent only a season at Punt Rd but he became a central element in the preparation to take on his former team Hawthorn yesterday.

So much so that the 32-year-old Richmond defender soon feared it could lead to the worst possible finish to his 243-game career.

After Graham announced his retirement during the week, coach Terry Wallace used the moment to try to draw some extra motivation from his troops.

"We had a big build-up this week," Graham said. "Winning is always the objective but with milestones Terry puts a little bit more importance on those games."

One of football's solid citizens who has never been in danger of being caught up in the celebrity whirlpool of the modern game, Graham was proud but a little unnerved about being the centre of attention.

He was even more so by halftime, after the Hawks had jumped out to a 31-point lead. Suddenly, all that pre-game energy had dissipated, which Graham says made him think the players may have been "over-aroused".

The feeling in the Richmond rooms suddenly took on an all-too familiar feel.

People stood in corners silently wondering whether the team, after a long, arduous season, was about to revert to the habits of the recent past. "We just came out of the blocks so flat. Terry got into us and said that the forwards were flat, that there was no chasing," he said.

Wallace later observed that the day took on much greater significance, and not simply because Graham was playing his last game and the other retiring veteran, Wayne Campbell, his penultimate game.

"I thought (a win) was really important for the spirit of the footy club," Wallace said, noting that people would have been saying that the same old, insipid Tigers had come out to play.

"To lose today we would have been manifesting what others were saying."

By three-quarter time the momentum had begun to shift and, trailing by only 12 points, Wallace again invoked the names of Graham and Campbell.

"He gave us a massive rev at three-quarter time," Graham said. "He said: `If you don't want to do it for yourself, there's Wayne and myself. For God's sake, have a crack'."

Graham knew the message had hit home when he saw running defender Chris Hyde attack an early last quarter contest with chilling courage.

"Chris's first attack in that last quarter said it all," he said. "He put his head over it and almost got it knocked off. It didn't matter one bit to him that he'd had a fractured skull earlier this year. It was just so inspirational.

"The boys just ripped in. They threw themselves into everything. They were kicking torps. It was like footy in the '70s, getting down there long and deep.

"To be four goals or so down and then to come back with the last play of the day was simply amazing."

When it was all over, Graham walked around the rooms in a daze, hugging supporters and chatting to anyone who wanted to listen. He looked for all the world a young man wishing a perfect day would never end.

"At the end of the game I didn't really know what emotions were running through me. I was happy, sad, all over the joint," he said. "To win a premiership in your last game would be the ultimate but for me what happened today was just an incredible feeling."

And it was made all the more special when his old mates from Glenferrie put aside their own feelings of devastation to form a line and applaud him as he departed on the shoulders of his Richmond teammates.

"That's just class, isn't it?" he said.

Indeed, it was.

http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,16337666%255E19771,00.html

Offline julzqld

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Re: Rebuilding clubs want every win (The Age)
« Reply #3 on: August 22, 2005, 07:51:20 AM »


The Tigers have to find replacements for Richo, Darren Gaspar and need a ruckman. http://www.realfooty.theage.com.au/realfooty/articles/2005/08/21/1124562753055.html
Ruckman?  Hello - we still have Stafford, Simmo & Knoble with Pattison coming up.